It didn't know about the Woodboring beetle: <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Woodboring_beetle" rel="nofollow">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Woodboring_beetle</a><p>Doing this felt odd, it was like it wore out something in my brain. After a while I could picture the animals I wanted to enter but I struggled to remember the word for them. Only now, a minute or so after stopping, could I remember 'Dragonfly'<p>I was also amused by the reaction to "crab":<p>> (Carcinization makes it hard to define “crab”, so I'm going to pretend you said “brown crab”.)
One of the few sites with a fun "you have javascript turned off" message.<p>> This game requires JavaScript. Or, if you've superior taste, take out a pen and paper and start listing animals.
I just made a variant of this that uses the browser speech recognition API. It's simplified, with none of the flair of the original, but should be fun to play in person. It's fun to shout animal names at computer with friends.<p><a href="https://t.moveything.com/animalscream/" rel="nofollow">https://t.moveything.com/animalscream/</a><p>(works best on desktop chrome. it's too slow on safari in my testing.)
I added Jellyfish and then Portuguese Man-o-war.<p>It took the man o war, but crossed out Jellyfish and said "added a vaguer term", but a jellyfish and a man-o-war are discrete animals.<p>The man-o-war is a colonial siphonophore composed of zooids, while a jellyfish is a singular marine organism.<p>They're both in the phylum Cnidaria, and that would have been a more vague term had I entered it.
It raises the question: can a colony of individual animals (zooids in this case) that work cooperatively be called a singular animal itself? I think biologists say yes, but it’s an interesting taxonomic boundary.
AFAIK, a "super-organism" composed of individual entities is defined as one where the long-term fitness interests of those individuals and their groups are completely and permanently aligned.<p>For example an ant colony is a super-organism. That’s why it makes sense for a soldier ant to die for her queen.
We think cows are singular animals, despite being made up of lots of different organisms with different DNA. (Much of the diversity happening in the gut.)
I think the bacteria in your gut outnumber the human cells in your body.
I added "kudu", a type of antilope, and it replaced it with "turtle". I don't know the relationship between the 2, but it doesn't pass a toddler's sniff test!
that's like saying tomato is a fruit<p>in biological journal, sure - for practical purposes straight up no<p>if it looks like a jellyfish, stings like a jellyfish and behaves like a jellyfish - then it doesn't matter what it looks like under a microscope, it is jellyfish
Many people now know that a tomato is a fruit, and will distinguish it with exactly the 'did you know a tomato is not a vegetable?' fun fact, so I'm not sure this is a great point. If someone asked me to list vegetables and they were being rigorous about it I wouldn't list a tomato. If they're not being rigorous about it then anything goes really - sometimes you can put things like apples in a salad so that must be a vegetable as well.
A tomato is definitely a vegetable.<p>Botanically, there are no such things as vegetables. The classification of a thing as a "vegetable" is strictly a culinary distinction. Cucumbers, tomatoes, apples, oranges, they're all the fruit of the plant, but the first two are culinarily classified as vegetables and the last two as fruits.<p>Also, salad is a preparation method, specifically the chopping of ingredients and the application of a sauce to make a semi homogeneous dish. It is not strictly a dish of chopped vegetables, so putting apples "in a salad" doesn't mean the apple is being used as a vegetable. You can put meat in a salad and it doesn't make the meat a vegetable. Tuna salad can be made with no vegetables at all.
In modern English, most people use "vegetable" with its current culinary meaning.<p>In earlier centuries, "vegetable" still had mostly its original meaning taken from Latin, where "Vegetabilia", as used e.g. by Linnaeus for the "vegetabile regnum", referred to any living beings capable of growth, but incapable of motion, i.e. mainly to the terrestrial plants.<p>Strictly speaking, seeds, grains, nuts, fruits, roots, bulbs, leaves, stems, etc. are all parts of vegetables.<p>What in English is now called "vegetables" corresponds to the Latin word "holera", whose original meaning was "greens", and not at all with the Latin word "vegetabilia". Also English "fruits" does not correspond with Latin "fructa", but with Latin "poma". Latin "fructa" referred to the useful results of some activity, a sense still encountered more rarely in English.
Apples are not fruit in the strict botanical sense.<p>> Apples are considered "accessory fruits" (or sometimes termed "false fruits") rather than true botanical fruits because the fleshy, edible part develops primarily from the flower's hypanthium or receptacle, not just the ovary. The actual, true fruit is the core containing the seeds, making it a pome.
Portuguese Man o' Wars look distinct enough from jellyfish. Their sails make parts of their bodies float above water, something no jellyfish can do to my knowledge. I can confuse species of jellyfish but there's no confusing the man o' wars...
yeah there are lots of inaccuracies.<p>I added bobcat, then lynx, and it would not accept lynx because bobcat was there.<p>Oh, and, 77, just woke up. No coffee.
"Lynx" can refer to either the Eurasian lynx <i>(Lynx lynx)</i> specifically, or to the genus <i>Lynx</i> and the four extant species in it (Eurasian lynx, Canada lynx, Iberian lynx, bobcat). And the game recognizes all the four lynx species as distinct animals if you use the full names. In general it understands imprecise common/genus names as hypernyms of the more precise species names, which is the correct way to do it IMO.<p>In general, of course, even distantly related animals may share a common name due to superficial similarities – what is "robin", for example? The American robin was named after the European robin by analogy, simply because both happen to have a red breast. The two species aren't even in the same family.
Likewise, it wouldn't accept “panther” because “tiger” was already there:<p>> I assume you mean “panther” in the general sense of any big cat.<p>Why on Earth would it assume mean <i>that</i>, of all things, rather than “black panther”? If it's gonna be pedantic about it, it could've complained about “leopard” and “jaguar” already being there (which they were) instead of complaining about an animal that nobody in their right mind would call a “panther”.
There is no actual "panther" animal though, the word is used for several different animals (leopards, jaguars and pumas at least, I think).<p>They can all have melanistic coats and are then often called black panthers. But that's not a species.
I believe the poster you're replying to understands that. They're noting that the complaint about panther was curiously because they had already listed tiger, which is practically never called a panther, and not because they already listed leopard, which is a cat that is often called a panther. The statement about meaning "any big cat" I would guess to be a confusion based on the name Pantherinae for the subfamily of Felidae of which all these big cats are part. Though the puma, which as you note is also called a panther, is in the different subfamily, Felinae.<p>I personally just tend to avoid the word panther, because it very often causes confusion as to which cat you're talking about.
114, here, because it allows extinct animals (sabre tooth, Mammoth, stegasaurus, etc)<p>Also, things we normally don't consider animals - tapeworm, aphid, etc.<p>Also accepted blue whale, sperm whale and orca :-/
Ha I also got exactly 114, though I didn't think of literally any that you put in your comment (except a more generic "whale" guess.)
All of those species belong to the animalia kingdom. They <i>are</i> animals. So are starfish. "Animal" doesn't mean "mammal".
Did anyone else have the thought of “should I just list off all the Ubuntu version names that I know and start with that”?
Presumably inspired by this tweet: <a href="https://x.com/Fredward3948576/status/1763363909669388588" rel="nofollow">https://x.com/Fredward3948576/status/1763363909669388588</a>
For anyone wondering: This is based on basic text parsing and a key-value lookup table, no AI involved whatsoever.<p>Here's the table: <a href="https://rose.systems/animalist/lower_title_to_id.js" rel="nofollow">https://rose.systems/animalist/lower_title_to_id.js</a>
There must be another table. I got "Are you Australian?" for "dingo" and for "cicada" "don't you love their songs?"<p>edit: <a href="https://rose.systems/animalist/eggs.js" rel="nofollow">https://rose.systems/animalist/eggs.js</a>
Hmm, what's this one?<p><pre><code> var h = hash(guess);
if (h==7182294905658010 || h==6344346315172974) { return "Adorable guess, but it's spelled “rosy”."; }
</code></pre>
I'm guessing they're hashes for "<something> rosie" or "<something> rosey", but what?
Yea, there's a bunch of easter eggs. And then there's the table for the taxonomy tree.
<a href="https://rose.systems/blog/list-animals-until-failure" rel="nofollow">https://rose.systems/blog/list-animals-until-failure</a> on how it's made!
There's a long Indonesian string referencing "weasel" - weird <a href="https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q28521" rel="nofollow">https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q28521</a><p>Edit: someone edited to remove it just this minute!<p>Introduction: <a href="https://www.wikidata.org/w/index.php?diff=2353193943" rel="nofollow">https://www.wikidata.org/w/index.php?diff=2353193943</a> - just random vandalism I suppose.
No LLMs is impressive. Also recognizes "drop bear". Well played.
Because the dataset is pulled from Wikidata: (drop bear) <a href="https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q4819356" rel="nofollow">https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q4819356</a>
Hahah in a moment of desperation I put “unicorn” which its response made me laugh out loud.
Ahah. After trying myself, I immediately tried "Obama" and it works !
But oddly enough, most personality with a name in the "List of organisms named after famous people" doesn't work. Nether does bacterium or fish !<p><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_organisms_named_after_famous_people" rel="nofollow">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_organisms_named_after_...</a>
The Australian Museum recognises them also: <a href="https://australian.museum/learn/animals/mammals/drop-bear/" rel="nofollow">https://australian.museum/learn/animals/mammals/drop-bear/</a><p>Somewhat more impressively, it recognises bungarra .. although it stalls out and fails on other similar words for various local animals.
“Haggis” also gets a good response
<a href="https://rose.systems/animalist%0A%0A180%20animals%20listed%0A%F0%9F%A6%86%F0%9F%90%BB%F0%9F%90%BB%F0%9F%90%BC%F0%9F%90%A8%F0%9F%A6%86%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%A6%A9%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%E2%80%8D%E2%AC%9B%F0%9F%90%A6%E2%80%8D%E2%AC%9B%F0%9F%90%A6%E2%80%8D%E2%AC%9B%F0%9F%A6%85%F0%9F%A6%85%F0%9F%A6%85%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A7%F0%9F%90%BA%F0%9F%90%A7%F0%9F%90%A7%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%A6%86%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%93%85%AA%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%A6%89%F0%9F%A6%89%F0%9F%A6%89%F0%9F%A6%89%F0%9F%A6%89%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%8E%AA%F0%9F%8E%AA%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A9%F0%9F%98%BA%F0%9F%90%9B%F0%9F%A6%97%F0%9F%AA%B0%F0%9F%95%B7%F0%9F%95%B7%F0%9F%95%B7%F0%9F%95%B7%F0%9F%95%B7%F0%9F%AA%B0%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%A5%94%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%BF%F0%9F%90%A2%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%9F%F0%9F%90%9F%F0%9F%A6%88%F0%9F%A6%88%F0%9F%90%9F%F0%9F%90%8B%F0%9F%90%B3%F0%9F%90%80%F0%9F%A6%90%F0%9F%A6%80%F0%9F%A6%9E%F0%9F%A6%90%F0%9F%A6%80%F0%93%87%BC%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%AA%B3%F0%9F%90%9B%F0%9F%90%9D%F0%9F%90%9B%F0%9F%90%9C%F0%93%85%A3%F0%93%85%A3%F0%93%85%A3%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%93%85%BC%F0%9F%90%A1%F0%9F%AA%BF%F0%9F%AA%BF%F0%9F%90%A6%F0%9F%A6%86%F0%9F%A6%86%F0%93%85%A7%F0%93%85%A7" rel="nofollow">https://rose.systems/animalist%0A%0A180%20animals%20listed%0...</a>
Nice! I added this to the HN Arcade <a href="https://andrewgy8.github.io/hnarcade/games/games/list-animals-until-failure" rel="nofollow">https://andrewgy8.github.io/hnarcade/games/games/list-animal...</a>
Fantastic. Thanks for this.<p>Might you want to add Super Monkey Ball too if you haven't already?<p><a href="https://monkeyball-online.pages.dev/" rel="nofollow">https://monkeyball-online.pages.dev/</a><p><a href="https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46789961">https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46789961</a>
Thanks for actually maintaining this instead of leaving it as a one-off dump!
68. The unique title texts are really fun. But I strongly disagree that "chipmunks are squirrels".
This is what I'm saying. Chipmunks are not squirrels. I will do my best on this hill.
Similarly, it insisted to me that a pigeon is the same thing as a mourning dove. Not true! But your case is even more egregious.
"pigeon" and "dove" are both words for the same family of birds. The bird most people think of with the word "pigeon" is the rock dove (<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rock_dove" rel="nofollow">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rock_dove</a>) or domesticated / feral variants of it.
Yep, but importantly "pigeon" and "dove" are not exactly interchangeable words, there is just no consensus for which is which.<p><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Columbidae" rel="nofollow">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Columbidae</a>
Homing pigeon has a nice response :)
There are some weird ones. It knew red-bellied woodpecker but not yellow-bellied woodpecker.
Lazy daisy:<p><pre><code> (async () => {
for (c of 'red black white brown blue green yellow golden grey arctic mountain forest spotted striped'.split(' '))
for (a of 'bear lion tiger wolf fox eagle shark whale snake frog cat dog horse bat rat mouse owl hawk duck crab ant bee spider deer penguin elephant rabbit'.split(' ')) {
guessbox.value = c + ' ' + a;
uncomment(); attempt();
await new Promise(r => setTimeout(r, 75));
}
})();</code></pre>
(async(s=new Set(Object.values(PARENT)))=>{for(i in ID_TO_TITLE)if(!s.has(i)){guessbox.value=ID_TO_TITLE[i];uncomment();attempt();await new Promise(requestAnimationFrame)}})()<p>This is a concise, pretty naive way highest possible high-score by just guessing everything in the internal animal database, and avoiding "parents". I'm not sure how many points it would get us because it would take like 3 hours to complete. However, we can do a lot better for the score by analyzing some additional things:<p>(The following numbers may be off a bit due to overlapping sets or just recording them at different stages of investigation/understanding, but they're darn close)<p>The game has 379,729 animals in its list (ID_TO_TITLE), mapped from 768,743 input strings (LOWER_TITLE_TO_ID).<p>52,546 are parents of some other animal, so it's best to skip those: If you guess "bird" first and then guess "eagle", then eagle won't count for points. Unless...well, more on that towards the end!<p>4,485 rows are considered to be "too specific". For example, there are 462 species under <i>Mordellistena</i> but the game says "nah screw all that, <i>Mordellistena</i> is specific enough".<p>3,127 are duplicates, they're the same species but have different names from different era. e.g. <i>Megachile harthulura</i> was discovered in 1853 but renamed to <i>Megachile cordata</i> in 1879. The game counts these only once.<p>3,116 are...weird: I think these are mostly errata caused by the input parser redirecting guesses to different IDs than the raw/full database expects. The parser maps the text to some "correct" ID but leaves a different, perhaps similar ID uncredited. This could happen because the text parser strips out hyphens, e.g. there's an entry for <i>Yellow-tail</i> which should be a duplicate of <i>Yellow-tail moth</i> but "Yellow-tail" gets parsed to "yellowtail" which gets mapped to the fish <i>Japanese Amberjack</i>. Sometimes it's skipping ranks in the taxonomy, like the beetle <i>Neomordellistena parvula</i> maps directly to a Subfamily, which skips the Genus level required to verify the lineage. Sometimes it's things that got reclassified from one genus to another. And sometimes there are rows that are a family which get mapped to a genus, which is also a row (<i>Dilophosauridae</i> -> <i>Dilophosaurus</i>)<p>28 rows are impossible to reach because they need a curly apostrophe that the parser replaces with a straight apostrophe if you put it in the input box. 23 of the straight version maps to a different animal. For example, "budin's tuco tuco" (curly) maps to Budin's tuco-tuco, but after normalization it becomes "budin's tuco tuco" (straight), which maps to Reddish tuco-tuco. 5 of them have keys with curly apostrophes where the straight version doesn't exist in the database at all.<p>One entry in the list of animals is 'zorse' (zebra-horse hybrid) but this guess is explicitly rejected because it doesn't have its own wikipedia page (the wikipedia page for that is a redirect to "Zebroid").<p>That brings us down to a maximum score of 316,457<p>but then there are 722 entries in the string mapping table which are strings that don't appear in the raw animal table which can map to otherwise blocked animals, like <i>Mongolian wolf</i>. This animal exists and could count to your score, but if you type "Mongolian wolf", it maps to <i>Himalayan wolf</i> and you get credit for that instead of <i>Mongolian wolf</i>. However, it also contains a mapping for "woolly wolf" which gives you credit for <i>Mongolian wolf</i>.<p>That brings us up to the actual maximum score of 317,179<p>Then, because of these 10,034 unreachable leaf-nodes (non-parent rows in the animal list), sometimes all the children of a parent is unreachable, so because we never claimed any points for their children, we can go get the points for the parents. This adds 5,561 points.<p>This brings us up to 322,740.<p>By doing the 'maximum' 30 guesses per second (limited guesses to the game tick rate of 30fps), it would take an absolute minimum 3 hours to submit every animal. Just a note, the countdown timer counts down from 1 minute, but 6 seconds are added for every correct guess. So by the time you're done the countdown timer would reach 22.6 days, which you'd have to wait to elapse before the game is actually "won".<p>If we remove some visual effects, we can reduce that by spamming guesses for 12ms, then pause for 4ms to let the browser render which keeps the tab responsive.<p>But the guesses still slow down over time due to a O(N²) algorithm in the game's code: it checks your current guess against a List (the array structure in JS), which is an O(N) check that runs N times, for an overall O(N²) performance hit. We can patch that function so it checks against a Set instead of a List to keep it O(1).<p>On an M2 MBP, this gets the high-score in under 30 seconds while keeping the game logic unchanged in function. But the visual effects were nice and it's rather soulless without the author's artistic vision. Turning them back on and giving it the 6ms required to render all of them slows this from 30 seconds to a boring 5 minutes. We can make it run the game logic 98% of the time and then render for 2% of the time, but it's still a bit too slow because the browser has to recalculate the page layout (DOM) every time a guess it submitted via the input box. So we can also skip the actual input box.<p>That reduces it to a lovely 20 seconds to get the highest possible score!<p>Then some memoization, some stupid tweaks to keep the UI looking nice, and adding a progress meter, aggressive minimization for HN posting, and we get the final script running in 16.5 seconds.<p>You'll still have to wait 22.75 days for the countdown timer to run out to win the game. I didn't want to actually change any of the game's logic or game the win condition, so editing that is left as an exercise to the reader! :)<p>(async()=>{"undefined"==typeof guessed_ids&&newGame();const e=e=>e.trim().toLowerCase().replaceAll("-"," ").replaceAll("’","'").replaceAll(/ +/g," "),o=LOWER_TITLE_TO_ID.human,t=LOWER_TITLE_TO_ID.crow,n={},r={},s={},c={};for(const[e,o]of Object.entries(LOWER_TITLE_TO_ID))(n[o]??=[]).push(e);for(const[e,o]of Object.entries(PARENT))(r[o]??=new Set).add(e);for(const[o,t]of Object.entries(ID_TO_TITLE)){if(LOWER_TITLE_TO_ID[e(t)]===o){s[o]=t;continue}const r=n[o]?.find((t=>LOWER_TITLE_TO_ID[e(t)]===o));r&&(s[o]=r)}const i=e=>{if(void 0!==c[e])return c[e];const o=r[e];return c[e]=!!o&&[...o].some((e=>s[e]||i(e)))},a=(e,o)=>{for(let t=PARENT[e];t;t=PARENT[t])if(t===o)return!0;return!1},d=[],l=[],p=[];for(const e of Object.keys(s)){if(i(e))continue;const n=s[e];(e===o||e===t?d:a(e,t)?l:p).push(n)}const f=[...p.splice(0,10),...d];for(;l.length||p.length;)f.push(...l.splice(0,6),...p.splice(0,6));const u=window.guessbox,g=window.comment,m={value:"",focus(){},disabled:!1},w={innerText:""};Object.defineProperty(window,"guessbox",{get:()=>m,configurable:!0}),Object.defineProperty(window,"comment",{get:()=>w,configurable:!0});const b=new Set(guessed_ids);guessed_ids.includes=e=>b.has(e),guessed_ids.push=e=>{Array.prototype.push.call(guessed_ids,e),b.add(e)};const T=.02,x=new Set(["longcat","dropbear","drop bear","sidewinder"]),O=log.prepend.bind(log);log.prepend=e=>{const o=x.has(e.innerText.toLowerCase().split(" → ")[0]);(o||Math.random()<T)&&(O(e),log.children.length>25&&[...log.children].reverse().find((e=>!e.dataset.vip))?.remove(),o&&(e.dataset.vip="true"))};const _=summonConfetto;summonConfetto=(...e)=>{Math.random()<T&&_(...e)};const h=Object.getOwnPropertyDescriptor(HTMLElement.prototype,"innerText").set;Object.defineProperty(scorespan,"innerText",{set:e=>{(Math.random()<T||"0"===e)&&h.call(scorespan,e)}});const L=document.createElement("div");L.style.cssText="position:fixed;top:10px;right:10px;width:180px;background:linear-gradient(135deg,rgba(180,100,200,.85),rgba(100,180,220,.85));color:#fff;font:12px monospace;padding:10px;z-index:999999;border-radius:10px;text-shadow:1px 1px 1px#000",document.body.append(L);const y=f.length,E=Date.now();let I=0,j=E;for(;I<y;){const e=performance.now();for(;performance.now()-e<32&&I<y;){m.value=f[I++],uncomment();try{attempt()}catch{}}const o=Date.now();if(o-j>500){const e=(o-E)/1e3;L.innerHTML=`${(I/y*100).toFixed(1)}% | ${I/e|0}/s<br><small>${I.toLocaleString()}/${y.toLocaleString()}</small>`,j=o}await new Promise((e=>requestAnimationFrame(e)))}h.call(scorespan,score),Object.defineProperty(window,"guessbox",{value:u}),Object.defineProperty(window,"comment",{value:g}),L.innerHTML=`100% in ${((Date.now()-E)/1e3).toFixed(1)}s<br><small>${y.toLocaleString()}/${y.toLocaleString()}</small><br><b style=color:#8f8> ${score.toLocaleString()}</b>`})();
I got 42. I was very impressed by how it handled more and less specific categories. It also understood rotifers were a microscopic animal, which I half expected not to work. Great project.
This was fun.
I definitely could feel the fatigue slowing me down until the timer got me. I also wasted a bunch of time trying to spell specific animals like the wobbegong.<p>I like the emoji output as well:
203 animals listed:<p>𓃬𓆊 𓃜𓃘𓅱𓆉𓅃
267, I was going pretty strong and had about 2 minutes racked up, until I hit a wall, and couldn't think of anything else. Thinking in groups helped the most, e.g. reptiles, flightless birds, african animals, etc.<p>Extinct animals also work, including the dinosaurs!
79. I feel like i should have done better but got stuck in a local minima of "farm animals, which <i>obvious</i> farm animals haven't I said??", then tried thinking of names of fish which worked until it didn't.
This was a lot of fun.<p>The game mechanic of a count down timer made for much better play.<p>I was most surprised for bluebottle to be replaced with man o' war. We know the man o' war here in bermud by that name whereas a bluebottle is what I would call house fly.
It might be an interesting LLM benchmark: how many can they list without breaking the rules (repetition or non-animals). Although I bet that big bucks would be then thrown at pointlessly optimizing for that benchmark, so...
Might be an interesting problem for understanding how various models perform recollection of prior tokens within the context window. I'm sure they could list animals until their window is full but what I'm not sure of is how much of the window they could fill without repeating.
I guess it could be generalized to filling up the context window with any token, but just making sure none of the tokens repeat.<p>An interesting twist could be making sure a specific token is an anagram of the token N tokens back. This could possibly measure how much a model can actually plan forwards.
Even more interesting is if a thinking LLM would come up with tricks mitigating its own known limits - like listing animals in alphabetical order, or launching a shell/interpreter with a list that contains previous answers (which it then checks each new answer against).
you might like <a href="https://github.com/aidanmclaughlin/AidanBench" rel="nofollow">https://github.com/aidanmclaughlin/AidanBench</a>
Too bad it doesn't show some scoreboard or stats of other players.
157. Very neat! Started a, b, c then found much more success when thinking about biomes (sea, mountains, forest, jungle, etc).
At some point my wife recommended listing animals, flowers, etc. alphabetically as a way to distract the mind to help get to sleep. It's a great exercise.
That's weird. I tried Secretariat, which was definitely an animal and definitely has a Wikipedia page, but it wasn't accepted.
WTF? That is the most ominous count down to ten sequence I've seen on the internet. I felt like I was choosing between the blue wire and the red wire.
Very fun and impressive to do this without LLMs!<p>My score:<p>191 animals listed
𓆈𓇼 ⬛鯉𓃱唐𓆉𓃸𓆣𓆉<p>(update: oh... looks like you can't paste the full emoji string here)
Accepts the word "human" as well.<p>update: Start with "human" or "homo sapiens" and the website keeps changing as you add new words.
I said "ape" after and it wouldn't take it because I'd said human already :)
I like how it triggers an overlay when you try "human", it's a nice touch
Instead of trying to think of just any animal, I found it easier to add a constraint…<p>1. Animal that starts with A<p>2. Animal that starts with B<p>3. Animal that starts with C<p>…<p>(I also appreciated the easter eggs: “Are you Australian?” and “You listed both dingos and dogs, so I gave you the benefit of the doubt, but there's disagreement on whether the dingo is its own species of canid, a subspecies of grey wolf, or simply a breed of dog.”)
What comes after C?
Without considering if it’s a distinct species, a dingo is descended from the same wolf population as dogs.<p>They are feral dogs. IE wolf -> domesticated dog -> became wild again.
I went by groups and families of animals.
This is actually one of many techniques used to identify dementia symptoms. Hopefully 85 is enough to pass.
Kicking myself because I ran out of time yet forgot to mention any vultures, elephants, or large cats. I guess that's for trying this first thing on a Sunday.
A mere 69, but I wonder if I would do better in my native language. Also, once I discovered it accepts extinct animals I went all in on dinos and other extinct animals, that's like half of my score.
I'm mildly bothered that I can't input "fox" because I already entered "fennec", and the game decided it should be "fennec fox" :)
Pretty cool but it won't allow "parrot" after "budgie" because budgie is more specific? A budgie isn't a parrot!<p>(Wikipedia says it actually is a type of parrot, but I definitely refer to different types of bird when I refer to a "parrot" vs a "budgie")
This is the trouble with common names, the way to avoid ambiguity is to use the binomial name.
It allowed me dingo after dog though.
Since this accepts all marine, freshwater and sky animals (birds) also this could take a very long time. For a bit more of a challenge in a shorter time list all animals starting with a particular letter. Time yourself a couple minutes to put some pressure on. Challenge your friends and family!
307. I think I could have kept going but I was exhausted. Dinosaurs helped a lot!
My favorite easter egg was "sidewinder".
110. my strategy is to use pokemon to remember animals. (i can list all 1025 pokemon from memory)<p>not a great strat, though. (tons repeated animals)
I created a similar game but where you can enter any category, for example programming languages, car brands or whatever. Of course uses LLMs <a href="https://gissallt.eliasf.se/" rel="nofollow">https://gissallt.eliasf.se/</a>
there are so many special cases that this game responds to, i was shocked that it didn’t involve an llm at all at the end. very cool.
High score was 322,740 <a href="https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46845068">https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46845068</a>
140. Good fun. I like how it teaches you things, too. I learned that toads are considered frogs, axolotls are salamanders, and that it's "anemone" not "anenome". If you type in Unicorn it accepts it as "Unicorn spider" with a fun message. Don't forget to think of insects, birds and fish too, all of which it accepts. I love this kind of detailed, handcrafted thing that someone put a lot of time and effort into.<p>If you wanted to develop this more, some fun features might be telling you the most commonly entered animals you missed and the most unusual ones you thought of. Appreciate you probably want to keep it a static site though.
Possum => opossum is erroneous. I was planning to list both species, it wasnt a typo.
I got to 60s before the lag became too much. I'm not sure "car" should be an accepted answer!
This thread taking a hard left into “what even counts as X” (apples! jellyfish! definitions!) is peak HN energy. The game is fun; the accidental live demo of ontology pain is even better.
Fun :) but mobile text input was the main challenge.
ARE YOU THINKING OF AN ANIMAL? yes<p>DOES IT SWIM? no<p>IS IT A BIRD?<p><a href="https://www.atariarchives.org/basicgames/showpage.php?page=4" rel="nofollow">https://www.atariarchives.org/basicgames/showpage.php?page=4</a>
TIL toads are frogs.
Proud I got 131 :)
129 here, not bad for the end of the day. I listed a surprising number of dinosaurs, and of course, edible animals, and Lion King stuff.
106, I feel like I should have done much better. (I feel like I cheated by naming a lot of dinosaurs and insects.)<p>The clown emoji is great. :)
Fun results: outputted as emoji<p>30 animals listed
𓃱 𓃸<p>Edit: weird... emojis don't work here? how have I never known this...
This game thinks buffalo and bison are the same thing and elk and deer are the same thing. Which is absurd, they even require buying different tags when hunting.
African swallow
European swallow.<p>Game over. You didn’t list lion.
This is awesome. I made it to 100, but I know jack about animals.
49 as ESL speaker. Fun little game to practice English words :)
this was really delightful. The Easter eggs in particular made it feel like someone was actually on the other side
> great tit<p>> Thanks!<p>Amazing.
130<p>Fun game, but also a fascinating brain-probe. We're not used to reversing our internal classifiers.
205! The running commentary was fun. And I love how permissive it is -- it was fun stumbling into a new category that you wouldn't necessarily expect to qualify. I do wish that there was an option to see a list of the most popular ones you missed (based on traffic to the article or similar).<p>For a similar brain exercise, try to Name Every City:<p><a href="https://cityquiz.io/" rel="nofollow">https://cityquiz.io/</a>
The background is alternating between cyan and black, which is very distracting. Not sure if that's on purpose.
drop bear => Already said Koala. but if you type it before you say koala the answer drops from the top of the page. so many great easter eggs. got 92 in the end
I entered plankton, which technically isn't an animal and so it rejected it like any other random word, but then after I lost it offered me a link to the Wikipedia article on plankton. Very thoughtful.
Typing human has some nice visual effects and writes "That's me".
I got:<p>Already said more specific animal: Leopard
I assume you mean “panther” in the general sense of any big cat.<p>At that point I stopped playing because this seems nonsense
where are the high scores?
205 and I very much was scraping the bottom of the barrel at the end. Starting a bit generic and adding specificity helped a lot. The little meta-commentary was great. "you already said dogs. dogs are dogs." when I tried "golden retrievers" after already typing dogs.
Countdown timer seemed stuck at 1:16 and then was suddenly big red and almost out of time?<p>66 animals listed
𓃬𓃰
Some animals replace vaguer definitions, but say "snake" is there forever, no cobra or viper for you. Strange.
It accepted tardigrade which I thought was interesting.
lots of animals
95. Definitely feel like I should have done better; will try another time with more sleep.
Lmfao black widow turns the title black I think
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